Author: Dr. Marcus Thornfield, Volcanologist and Geophysical Researcher
Most people see volcanic ash and think: apocalypse dust. Gray powder that chokes jet engines, buries towns, ruins crops. The stuff of Pompeii nightmares
The Toba supervolcano erupted 74,000 years ago in what is now Indonesia, spewing roughly 2,800 cubic kilometers of ash and rock into the atmosphere. That’
You’d think someone who spends their career studying mountains that occasionally explode would have a death wish. But volcanologists—the scientists
Beneath your feet right now, roughly 4,000 miles down, Earth’s core is sitting at a toasty 10,800 degrees Fahrenheit—hotter than the surface of the sun.
The seismometer sits there, unassuming as a shoebox, scribbling its little squiggles on paper or pixels. Most days it records the rumble of trucks, the
Deep beneath your feet, carbon atoms are getting squeezed like grapes in a hydraulic press. And the press? That’s a volcano doing what volcanoes
Deep beneath your feet right now, there’s a plumbing system that makes Manhattan’s steam tunnels look like garden hoses. We’
Eyjafjallajökull. Try saying that three times fast while your airline is canceling your flight to Barcelona. In April 2010, this Icelandic volcano with
The Philippines volcano Mayon killed more than 1,200 people in 1814. Nobody saw it coming—or rather, nobody knew what they were seeing. Fast forward to
Pompeii wasn’t just buried—it was fossilized mid-scream in 79 CE, and today over three million people live within striking distance of Vesuvius.










